SENATE BILL REPORT
SB 5449
As Reported By Senate Committee On:
Water, Energy & Environment, March 2, 2005
Title: An act relating to providing the department of ecology with lien authority to facilitate the recovery of remedial action costs.
Brief Description: Providing lien authority to the department of ecology to facilitate the recovery of remedial action costs under the model toxics control act.
Sponsors: Senators Poulsen, Swecker, Pridemore, Kline, Fraser and Rockefeller.
Brief History:
Committee Activity: Water, Energy & Environment: 1/25/05, 3/2/05 [DPS, DNP].
SENATE COMMITTEE ON WATER, ENERGY & ENVIRONMENT
Majority Report: That Substitute Senate Bill No. 5449 be substituted therefor, and the substitute bill do pass.Signed by Senators Poulsen, Chair; Rockefeller, Vice Chair; Morton, Ranking Minority Member; Fraser, Pridemore and Regala.
Minority Report: Do not pass.Signed by Senator Mulliken.
Staff: Sam Thompson (786-7413)
Background: The state Model Toxics Control Act authorizes the Department of Ecology (DOE)
to recover, from liable parties, costs the agency incurs in cleaning up toxic-contaminated sites.
DOE uses recovered costs to fund cleanup of other contaminated sites.
DOE does not have authority to file a lien on property to facilitate cleanup cost recovery, and
faces difficulties in recouping costs when a liable party is absent or bankrupt. DOE usually has
lower priority in recovering its cleanup costs in bankruptcy proceedings than most secured
creditors (e.g., mortgagees).
It has been suggested that DOE be authorized to file a priority lien to recover its cleanup costs and
that it also be permitted to recover increases in property value attributable to state-funded cleanup.
Summary of Substitute Bill: If the state incurs costs when cleaning up real property
contaminated by toxics, and is unable to recover its costs from a liable party, the Department of
Ecology (DOE) may file a lien against the property. The lien, which may be for either the full
amount of state cleanup costs or the increase in fair market value due to state cleanup, cannot in
any case exceed DOE's cleanup costs. Unless DOE determines that it is in the public interest to
remove the lien, it will continue until liability has been satisfied through sale of the property or
other means agreed to by DOE.
Lien for Up to Full Amount of State Cleanup Costs. Except for liens for local and special district
property tax assessments and for mortgages, these liens will have priority over all other
encumbrances affecting the property.
Lien Limited to Increase in Fair Market Value Due to State Cleanup. Liens limited in this way
have priority over all other encumbrances affecting the property. They may only be filed in
instances where the owner has abandoned the property (i.e., there has no significant business
activity for three years or property taxes are three years in arrears) or has failed to substantially
comply with a cleanup order. Increase in fair market value will be determined by the bona fide
purchase price of property or a DOE real estate appraiser.
Notice. When notifying persons of potential liability under the Model Toxics Control Act
(MOTCA), DOE will include a notice stating that if it incurs cleanup costs that it cannot recover,
DOE may file a lien against the property.
Except for emergency cleanup actions, DOE must, before starting cleanup conducted by a
contractor, provide notice to the property owner, mortgagees, lienholders of record, and
contractors of its authority to file a lien. For emergency cleanup actions, DOE must provide this
notice within 30 days after starting cleanup.
Before filing a lien, DOE must give the property owner, mortgagees, and lienholders notice of its
intent to file a lien. The notice must specify the lien's purpose, a property description, the state's
cleanup costs, probable cause that the identified property is subject to the costs, and a 30-day time
limit for responding with a defense. DOE must provide notice by certified mail.
Filing. DOE may file a lien if it receives no response or receives a response but determines that
there is probable cause for filing the lien. The lien is effective when filed with the auditor in the
county where the property is located. A filed lien statement must include a property description
and the amount of the lien.
If exigent circumstances require filing a lien prior to giving notice, or prior to expiration of the
30-day time limit for a response, DOE may file the lien immediately. Exigent circumstances
include an imminent bankruptcy filing by the owner, imminent property transfer, or both.
Appeal. An owner of property subject to a DOE lien may petition DOE to remove or reduce the
lien. If DOE denies the request, the owner may, within 90 days, file suit to remove or reduce the
lien. The lien will be removed if the owner can prove by a preponderance of the evidence that
they are not liable under MOTCA, and reduced if they can prove that lien exceeds DOE cleanup
costs. A lien limited to the increase in fair market value due to DOE cleanup will be reduced if
the lien exceeds DOE cleanup costs or exceeds the increase in fair market value solely attributable
to DOE cleanup.
DOE's decisions regarding filing, removing or reducing a lien are reviewable exclusively in
superior court MOTCA actions, including cost recovery suits, suits to enforce an order or seek
a civil penalty, suits for reimbursement, suits to compel investigative or remedial action, and
citizens' suits.
Exemptions. Exemptions are specified for property owned by a local government or special
purpose district and for residential property consisting of four residential units or less, unless the
property was used for illegal drug manufacturing and storage.
Substitute Bill Compared to Original Bill: DOE cleanup lien precedence is changed to third,
after property tax liens and mortgage liens, except for DOE liens for increase in fair market value
due to DOE cleanup, which will have priority over all other liens or security interests.
A DOE lien for increase in fair market value due to DOE cleanup is limited to instances where
the owner has abandoned property (i.e., there has no significant business activity for three years
or property taxes are three years in arrears) or failed to substantially comply with a cleanup order.
Increase in fair market value will be determined by the bona fide purchase price of property or
a DOE real estate appraiser.
Except for emergency cleanup actions, DOE must, before starting cleanup conducted by a
contractor, provide notice to property owner, mortgagees, lienholders of record, and contractors.
For emergency cleanup actions, DOE must provide this notice within 30 days after starting
cleanup.
DOE may not file a cleanup lien on property owned by local governments or special purpose
districts.
Language is deleted that may have required DOE to personally serve notice of intent its to file a
lien to owners and mortgagees; a notice by certified mail requirement is retained.
A provision limiting property owner response to DOE notice to defenses under Model Toxics
Control Act (MOTCA) is deleted.
New provisions clarify that owner of property subject to a DOE lien may petition DOE to remove
or reduce the lien. If DOE denies the request, the owner may, within 90 days, file suit to remove
or reduce the lien. The lien will be removed if the owner can prove by a preponderance of the
evidence that they are not liable under MOTCA, and reduced if they can prove that lien exceeds
DOE cleanup costs. A lien for increase in fair market value due to DOE cleanup will be reduced
if lien exceeds DOE cleanup costs or exceeds increase in fair market value solely attributable to
DOE cleanup.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available for original bill.
Committee/Commission/Task Force Created: No.
Effective Date: Ninety days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Testimony For: Taxpayers have an interest in recovering public sums spent to clean up privately-owned toxic waste sites. This legislation would enable DOE to recoup as much as $1.5 million in prior state-funded cleanups, and an estimated $4.5 million of $12 million projected to be spent cleaning up "orphaned" and abandoned toxic waste sites. The Federal Environmental Protection Authority and several states already have authority to recover "windfall" increases in property value due to government-funded cleanup. This legislation would improve implementation of the state Model Toxics Control Act.
Testimony Against: DOE already has lien authority, and should not be granted a lien superior to those held by banks and other creditors. Redevelopment of previously-contaminated property would be discouraged if purchasers were liable to DOE for the increase in property value; also, determining the cause of a "windfall" can be uncertain. A DOE lien should not have priority over liens held by lenders; lenders need first priority liens to ensure that loans are not overly costly or unavailable in previously contaminated industrial and low-income areas. Saleability of loans on the secondary market would be chilled. The standard of review for DOE lien filing decisions is inappropriate.
Who Testified: PRO: Jim Pendowski, Department of Ecology; Mo McBroom, WashPIRG.
CON: Eric Johnson, Washington Public Ports Association; Denny Eliason, Washington Bankers
Association; Stacy Augustine, Washington Credit Union League; Tom McBride, Association of
Washington Business.